Who was she? Loos was one of the most celebrated US screenwriters, playwrights and authors of the last century. Over her long life she experienced several careers and comebacks. Having been around at the birth of cinema she worked on scenarios, screenplays and silent film title cards for such legendary directors and stars as DW Griffiths, Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks, later going on to write some fine scripts for sound pictures. But she is most famous for writing the source novel of Gentlemen Prefer Blondes which was made into a film, twice. She later became a New York-based society journalist, unreliable memoirist and all-round wit.

Films we should catch at this year’s Loos retrospective All of them, natch, but the best ones are: San Francisco, The Women, The Struggle and of course Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953).

Interesting fact The proper pronunciation of Loos, her French family name, is ‘Lohse’, but, unlike the rest of her wealthy family, Loos could never be bothered to correct anyone who said it wrong. (Paul Dale)